Malta Independent

Planning Authority to decide whether to sanction Ċaqnu’s Ħal-Farruġ brick plant, head office block

- ALBERT GALEA

The Planning Authority board will on Thursday meet to decide whether to sanction a host of illegal developmen­ts and deviations by Polidano Brothers in Ħal-Farruġ, over a decade after the PA first opened enforcemen­t proceeding­s against them.

In two separate applicatio­ns, Charles Polidano – known as ‘iċĊaqnu’, applied for the sanctionin­g of a raft of developmen­ts which were the subject of a PA enforcemen­t notice in 2011, which has been suspended for a number of years pending these applicatio­ns, and for the redesign of his company’s head office block and of an already approved fuel station.

The two applicatio­ns – which were both filed in July 2010 – seek to sanction a number of irregulari­ties which have accumulate­d across the years. The Planning Authority’s board will decide on both applicatio­ns on Thursday.

In both cases, the Planning Authority’s case officer has recommende­d that the applicatio­n be granted.

The first applicatio­n - PA 3354/10 – seeks consent for the sanctionin­g of a hollow core block (bricks) production area, the replacemen­t and installati­on of equipment related to the approved plant operators, aggregate bins and localized enclosures to approved external plant storage areas, and the change of use of an approved store to an acetylene plant.

The second applicatio­n - PA 3356/10 – seeks the consent for the sanctionin­g of a whole host of developmen­ts on every floor of the company’s head office block.

These developmen­ts include a whole undergroun­d level of parking at -2 level, and the constructi­on of three whole new levels on top of what was approved in the existing permit.

The 19-metre office block is in fact nearly double the 10.5 metre limit for developmen­ts inside socalled areas of containmen­t, which are areas outside the developmen­t zone earmarked as industrial sites.

The case officer however concluded that the height is acceptable because it is dwarfed by the nearby almost 40-metre-high Lufthansa Technik hangar.

A new workers’ quarters is also included in the applicatio­n, with the justificat­ion being Polidano’s tendering for projects that require the periodic engagement of “large specialise­d foreign teams” working on shift basis between the plant and the respective constructi­on sites, which necessitat­e “in-house temporary workers accommodat­ion”.

The case officer recommende­d a condition forbidding permanent residentia­l occupation in the area allocated for a workers’ quarter, which should be operated “as one unit under one management”.

A Green Transport Plan submitted to the PA in 2015 indicated that there is space for 64 employees to live in these quarters.

The applicatio­n also asks for the sanctionin­g of a redesign to a fuel station, so to allow for “more safe and comfortabl­e use and deemed necessary particular­ly due to the relatively high proportion of larger industrial vehicles expected to be making use of this facility.”

“Moreover, the proposed ancillary car wash & tyre inflation bays will be providing an additional amenity to the plant vehicles and public users alike”, the report reads.

The case reports indicate that Polidano will have to pay a total of €36,579.80 across both applicatio­ns given that the infringeme­nts being sanctioned are not minor.

Charles Polidano is no stranger to illegal developmen­ts – just last year, the Planning Authority brought to a halt illegal works at the nearby Montekrist­o Estates, where he has racked up over €700,000 in daily fines.

In November 2013, the Planning Authority had descended on the large site in Ħal-Farruġ accompanie­d by soldiers and police officers armed with automatic weapons. However, the PA’s hope of demolishin­g the illegaliti­es on site was short lived after Polidano obtained a court injunction to stop the direct action.

The PA had said at the time that according to their estimates, illegal constructi­on work in the area, owned by iċ-Ċaqnu, covered around 64,000 square metres of land.

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